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This study will examine the safety and effectiveness of a combination kidney and bone marrow transplant from a relative with the same (or nearly the same) blood cell type as the transplant recipient. An investigational medication will be given prior to and after the transplant to help protect the transplanted kidney from attack by the body's immune system.

Condition or disease

Intervention/treatment

Phase

End-stage Renal DiseaseRenal TransplantationKidney Transplantation

Drug: Conditioning Regimen

Phase 1

Detailed Description:

Of the two currently available treatments for kidney failure, long-term dialysis and kidney transplantation, only kidney transplantation provides a potential cure. After a kidney transplant, the body's immune system recognizes the kidney as foreign and tries to attack and destroy it in a process called rejection. To avoid rejection, participants must take medications called immunosuppressants or anti-rejection drugs. It is believed that by transplanting bone marrow at the same time as a solid organ such as a kidney, a state of "mixed chimerism" (a mixing of the donor and recipient's immune system) can be achieved. Mixed chimerism may prevent rejection without the need for anti-rejection drugs.

Participants in this study will receive a simultaneous bone marrow and kidney transplant from the same living related donor in an attempt to establish mixed chimerism. Prior to transplantation, participants will undergo a "conditioning regimen" involving cyclophosphamide chemotherapy, radiation to the thymus gland, and four immunosuppressive medications: cyclosporine A, a man-made antibody known as rituximab to suppress B cells, a short course of steroids, and a T-cell depleting antibody known as MEDI-507. MEDI-507 is an investigational medication that has not been approved by the FDA. The primary goal of the study is to investigate the safety of the conditioning regimen and its ability to promote mixed chimerism so that the transplanted kidney is not destroyed. The study will also determine whether participants with mixed chimerism can eventually be safely removed from long-term immunosuppressive therapy following transplantation.

Participants will be assessed before and after transplantation and will be followed ≤36 months.

Cyclophosphamide intravenously (IV) on days -5 and -4 with respect to transplantation; MEDI-507 on days -1, 0, and 1 (after a test dose of 0.1 mg per kg on day -2); and cyclosporine A IV and thymic irradiation on day -1. Hemodialysis was performed before and 14 hours after each dose of cyclophosphamide.Kidney transplantation was followed by IV infusion of donor bone marrow. Oral cyclosporine A was administered daily postoperatively, with target trough blood levels of 250 to 350 ng per milliliter; the dose was tapered and discontinued over a period of several months.

Amendment applicable to the 4th and 5th participant: rituximab on days -7 and -2; and prednisone, 2 mg per kg per day starting on the day of transplantation with tapering over the next 10 days.

Drug: Conditioning Regimen

Cyclophosphamide 60 mg per kilogram (kg) of body weight per day intravenously (IV) on days -5 and -4 with respect to transplantation; humanized anti-CD2 monoclonal antibody (MEDI-507) 0.6 mg per kg on days -1, 0, and 1 (after test dose of 0.1 mg per kg on day -2); and cyclosporine A 5 mg per kg IV and thymic irradiation (700 cGy) on day -1. Hemodialysis was performed before and 14 hours after each dose of cyclophosphamide.Kidney transplantation was followed by IV infusion of donor bone marrow. Oral cyclosporine A was administered postoperatively, 8 to 12 mg per kg per day, with target trough blood levels of 250 to 350 ng per milliliter; the dose was tapered and discontinued over a period of several months. Protocol amendment that applied to participant 4 and 5: rituximab, 375 mg per square meter of body-surface area days -7 and -2; and prednisone, 2 mg per kg per day starting on the day of transplantation with tapering over the next 10 days.

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Ages Eligible for Study:

18 Years to 55 Years (Adult)

Sexes Eligible for Study:

All

Accepts Healthy Volunteers:

No

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

End-stage renal disease (ESRD) without prior sensitization (defined as Panel Reactive Antibody [PRA] greater than 20%) within the 60 days prior to transplant as measured by cytotoxicity assays, ELISA, and flow cytometry;

Undergoing a first or second transplant;

Receiving a transplant from a living related donor who is ABO (blood type) compatible and haploidentical (3, 4, or 5 antigen match by serologic typing);